(via OmniFocus for iPad for iPad on the iTunes App Store)
My most used app by far.
(via OmniFocus for iPad for iPad on the iTunes App Store)
My most used app by far.
Decisions decisions…
Testing out in case the whole sandboxing thing in Mountain Lion goes the way I think it will and OSX goes the way of iOS…
“A pig like that, you don’t eat all at once!” Ah, I’m going to miss my 7th graders so much.
Dear Western North Carolina Weather Diety(ies): Can you please keep the weather like this for all of June (and July and August)?
Home Screen June 2012
Mountains Beyond Mountains (mountains on the moon as visible from the eclipse tonight live from California… God bless the internet).
The 8th Graders Painted me!
Unfortunately, I’ll never know where this door in the bathroom leads…
Love the New @5by5 Radio App
Love the personal note from Marco Arment on the new Instapaper update today. So awesome.
For some reason, this all makes sense.
jemayer:
My LAST penguin, Penguin III.
Typewriter parts.
Reading with pals
Trouble
At the park
Today’s Hand Art (courtesy of Alyssa). Go Team Dragon.
Electromagnetic labs, magnet racer building and magnet game building going down. Our classroom is a working studio.
lickystickypickyme:
Real life Star Wars.
Laser Towards Milky Ways Center.
The color of the laser is precisely tuned to energize a layer of sodium atoms found in one of the upper layers of the atmosphere — one can recognize the familiar color of sodium street lamps in the color of the laser.
This layer of sodium atoms is thought to be a leftover from meteorites entering the Earth’s atmosphere. When excited by the light from the laser, the atoms start glowing, forming a small bright spot that can be used as an artificial reference star for the adaptive optics. Using this technique, astronomers can obtain sharper observations. For example, when looking towards the center of our Milky Way, researchers can better monitor the galactic core, where a central super massive black hole, surrounded by closely orbiting stars, is swallowing gas and dust.
Taken with a wide angle lens, this photo covers about 180° of the sky.